Eco Friendly Landscaping: How to Put Your Yard to Work for the Planet

Eco friendly landscaping benefits you AND the planet! Save money, improve air quality, and capture carbon in your yard with these strategies. Put your yard to work for the planet!

Our planet needs your help! Though it’s sometimes hard to see how our individual actions make a difference, when we all do our part, it can add up to some serious impact. Want to do something meaningful to help our imperiled planet? Look no further than your yard!

Your yard is about far more than curb appeal – it can have a significant impact on your carbon footprint, either adding greatly to it, or shrinking it considerably.

Here’s the deal: All that grass, fertilizer, and mowing is seriously bad for the planet. There are over 40 million acres of lawn in the United States, requiring more than 800 million gallons of gas EVERY YEAR. That’s 16 BILLION pounds of CO2 into the atmosphere! To cut grass. Insane, right?

(Experts believe another 17 million gallons of gas are spilled each year while refilling lawn mowers. Exxon Valdez? A mere 11 million gallons.)

Worse still, the climate impact of fertilizer and pesticides is huge. Each pound of the stuff takes 6 pounds of carbon to produce. Fertilizer has an especially large climate impact: It breaks down into nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas 300 times more potent than CO2.

(I interviewed some experts in the field for a more formal discussion of this issue in a piece I wrote for Sierra last year. If you want more detail, you can find that piece here.)

Your number one move to lessen the climate impact of your yard: Avoid carbon-intensive fertilizer. Then, try replacing some of your lawn with plants that can sequester more carbon and require less water and energy. An oak tree 18 inches in diameter, for example, can store nearly 1000 pounds carbon each year, and larger trees store even more.

Now if you’re an average American, you’re emitting 21 tons of carbon each year driving, powering your home, eating, and shopping. A few trees can offset that number considerably. If those trees also help feed your family, you can also shrink your foodprint.

You can find out more about the benefits of specific trees using the National Tree Benefits Calculator, which will show you not only carbon sequestration but energy and water savings and the impact on air quality and property value.

Say you replace some gas-guzzling grass with a couple apple trees and a few blueberry bushes. You’ll not only get free organic fruit for years to come, you’ll sequester hundreds of pounds of carbon each year and need less energy to cool your house.

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Ready to transform YOUR yard into a climate-change-fighting oasis?

5 Savvy Ways to Create a Climate-Positive Yard:

1. Limit the Lawn and Manage It Wisely:

Consider reducing the size of your lawn or getting rid of it altogether. There are some excellent lawn alternatives, including groundcovers, moss, clover, or creeping thyme. My yard is now covered in volunteer violets, which besides being a terrific no-maintenance groundcover, can be eaten or used medicinally. If you really want grass, look for a “no-mow” variety. No-mow grasses top out at about 4 inches and form a nice thick carpet of grass.

Skip the fertilizer – use a mulching mower and leave the grass cuttings where they fall. They will provide a natural slow-release fertilizer that should be sufficient to feed your lawn – no chemical fertilizer required! You’ll save money and pounds of carbon every summer.

Mow less often (and not too low), which not only saves gas and cuts down on pollution, but also helps keep weeds out and reduces the need for watering.

Water only when you need to, avoid watering in the middle of the day, and be sure the water lands on the plants, not the sidewalk.

Avoid herbicides and pesticides, which aren’t healthy for your family and endanger our pollinators.

2. Add Native Plants and Trees to Your Landscape

Larger plants help sequester carbon, while their deep roots help water infiltrate the soil; in contrast, grass lawns’ shallow root systems let water rush off without being absorbed. This strains stormwater systems and usually means you’ll need to water more. (The water piped into your house took energy to purify and deliver, so more water=more carbon.)

Because native plants are naturally adapted to our climate, they also require no fertilizer and little water or maintenance, Ask for native plants at your local nursery, or get divisions from a friend for free. (Here’s how to get free plants for your next eco-savvy gardening project.)

3. Landscape for Energy Savings

Strategically located trees can shade your home in summer and protect it from winter winds, significantly lowering your energy use (and power bill). Add shade trees to shield your home and air conditioning unit from the sun. Consider vines that add shade and protect your home from heat as well. Here are some helpful resources for landscaping to reduce energy needs from the Department of Energy.

4. Grow Some of Your Own Food

Using part of your yard for fruit trees or vegetable gardening allows you to shrink the ecological footprint of your food, while saving you money. Even growing a little can help, though I’m a fan of growing food everywhere possible.Fruit trees and shrubs are an easy way to grow food with little work.

Never grown anything? Pick up my quickstart guide to growing food for total newbies by filling in the form below!

5. Compost

You probably know that when food waste breaks down in the landfill, it emits methane, a greenhouse gas far more powerful than CO2. Composting your food waste keeps this from happening, while also preserving those valuable nutrients for your plants. (So you won’t need fertilizer — see how that works?) Composting is a win-win.

Composting can be as easy as tossing some food scraps and leaves in a bin. Here’s a good guide to getting started composting, including a great list of 100 things you can compost. In addition to saving on fertilizer, if you pay for trash collection, you can save money by wasting less. Why would you want to pay more to pollute, anyway?

Other great reasons to adopt some or all of these strategies: You’ll help endangered pollinators, improve air quality and protect our water supply. (Stay tuned for more detailed posts on these topics 🙂 )

If we replaced even a fraction of all that lawn, imagine the impact on the planet.

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Hi, I'm Susannah, a garden geek, energy nerd, and fan of healthy food and natural remedies. Need some simple, practical solutions for living healthier and greener? You've come to the right place! More about me and my green projects here.

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